Bright golden lemons are already inviting, but they’re even more so when glued to a wreath form and hung on a wall or door.

Image Credit: Blogspot/Ordy and Joon

3/14

Display Place Cards

If yellow is one of your wedding colors, consider using lemons, sliced down the middle so that they’ll stand, as holders for place cards. Just cut a slit in the top of each half and tuck in your guest’s name.

Image Credit: Style Me Pretty/flutter glass PHOTOGRAPHY

4/14

Serve Sorbet or Soufflé

To serve sorbet in a lemon, cut a lemon in half and hollow it out; then fill it with a scoop of your favorite sorbet. To use lemons as soufflé cups, cut a tip off one end of the lemon so that it will stand up; cut off the other side of the lemon about a quarter from the end. Hollow out the lemon, pour in your soufflé batter, and bake as you normally would.

Image Credit: Flickr/gimpbully

5/14

Add to Floral Arrangements

Spear a lemon with a skewer and then treat it as you would any other bloom.

Image Credit: Style Me Pretty/Christina Diane Weddings

6/14

Prop Up Signs

For an unexpected pop of color, prop up a sign in a metal tub or bucket filled with lemons.

Image Credit: Style Me Pretty/Samm Blake

7/14

Decorate a Serving Dish

For a simple and flavorful garnish in a lemony dish, line a clear glass serving bowl with thinly sliced lemons. This would also add some zing to a vase of flowers.

Image Credit: Fancy Edibles

8/14

Make Votive Holders

Cut a lemon in half, scoop out its flesh, and place a white votive candle inside for a subtle glow. Run a few of them down the center of the table at your next picnic.

Image Credit: Girls Guide To

9/14

Polish Metal Cookware

The acid in lemons makes them handy cleaning tools, and you can use their juice to make a scouring paste for steel, brass, and copper pots and pan. Make a paste of lemon juice and salt and rub it onto the metal. Let it sit five minutes, then rinse with warm water and dry.

Image Credit: Flickr/mckaysavage

10/14

Prevent Fruit From Browning

Toss fruit salad with lemon juice to keep fruit like apples and bananas from browning. This also works with guacamole: store prepared guacamole with a thin layer of lemon juice on top.

Image Credit: Flickr/46137

11/14

Deodorize Cutting Boards

Rub the cut half of a lemon over a plastic or wooden cutting board to help sanitize it and remove persistent odors like garlic and onion.

Image Credit: Flickr/Emily Barney

12/14

Sanitize the Microwave

Fill a microwave-safe bowl with water and add the juice and the rinds of a few lemons. Microwave for five minutes and then wipe down the microwave with a damp paper towel.

Image Credit: Flickr/Fubar61274

13/14

Set Them Afloat

Place slices of lemon in a bowl of water and float a votive candle on top.

Image Credit: Flickr/ehnmark

14/14

Infuse Seasonings

Add a hint of lemon flavor with homemade lemon-infused sea salt, pepper, or sugar. Combine lemon zest with sea salt (or pepper or sugar) in a mortar and use a pestle or your fingers to work the two ingredients together. Store in an airtight container.

Whether you decide to string them together, hollow them out, slice them in half, squeeze out their juice, or shave off their shiny yellow rinds, we bet you have never thought of using lemons like this. As an added bonus, lemons are so inexpensive that you can try any of these new uses without having to worry about breaking the bank.